>Amazing: the only hardware components in my machine that actually work
>as expected with recent Linux 2.5 kernels are the network cards, the RAM
>and the keyboard, and I had to replace a tulip card with an eepro100 for
>that. Even the CPU appears to run too hot with Linux, causing the
>system to boot spontaneously under load, and because ACPI is terminally
>broken in Linux and has been every time I tried it, I can't do much
>about it. Firewire does not like me (modprobe eth1394 -> oops), IDE
>loses interrupts (see above), my USB mouse stops working as soon as I
>plug in my USB hard disk (which works fine on my notebook and under
>Windows), using my IDE CD-R causes the machine to freeze while cdrecord
>does OTP, finalizing or eject. The nvidia graphics card takes major
>patching to work at all with X, and all of these components are
>well-known brand components from tier 1 suppliers that were chosen for
>reliability and market penetration over price. I envy people who can
>still evangelize Linux under circumstances like this. I sure as hell
>can not.
that's funny. I'm using a via board with a tulip card with acpi with usb
and with the via ide controller and with an ide cdr and all of it works
PERFECTLY (2.5.69 is the first 2.5 kernel which has been as good with
all my hardware as 2.4.2x) and there are no errors generated and
everything is working very responsively which is nice for a change. I
dont have anything that does firewire so i cant say much about that. I
have an nvidia card but it's on the P4 box which uses an intel
motherboard so it's not very useful here. But my matrox card is running
better than with any other kernel according to x11perf. I also have a
wintv card working perfectly and sblive dido.
The fact that you're having cooling problems causing reboots leads me to
believe that this is a hardware related problem due to either poor
construction or insufficient cooling and it's going to be really hard to
debug problems when you have overheating problems seeing as how
overheating causes random crap to occur. And even if you did fix the
cooling you may have already caused irreversible damage to components on
the motherboard or in the cpu-itself. It's easy to still back linux with
cases like this because they're not indicative of the kernel overall or
even in an obvious way.
I for one am extremely pleased with 2.5.69 as it is much more stable
than 2.3.x kernels were as they approached 2.4.x. It's user-land
software that i'm currently fighting with as it takes userland a long
time to catch up to the latest kernel and with big api changes like no
more proc i2c interface i've gotta go without some programs (procmeter)
for sensor data (which works 100% with sysfs). That and the fact that
userland really hates bug reports when you're using an odd numbered
kernel (samba).
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Thu May 15 2003 - 22:00:30 EST